Conley v. Quinn

1959 NMSC 065, 346 P.2d 1030, 66 N.M. 242
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 1, 1959
Docket6502
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1959 NMSC 065 (Conley v. Quinn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conley v. Quinn, 1959 NMSC 065, 346 P.2d 1030, 66 N.M. 242 (N.M. 1959).

Opinion

LUJAN, Chief Justice.

In this suit plaintiff-appellant, Ola Conley, seeks to quiet title to a community interest which she asserts in two parcels of real estate, to establish a community interest in certain personal property, and to establish her separate ownership of a few items of personalty.

The real property in question consists of the “Yeakley” tract and the “Austin” tract. The Yeakley property is a 160-acre tract in Curry County in which appellant asserts an undivided six-tenths interest, her alleged community interest plus a one-fifth interest in the remainder left her under the will of A. J. Conley. The Austin property is a 640-acre tract in Quay County in which appellant asserts an undivided one-half community interest.

The. personal property in question consists of ten promissory notes in principal sums totalling $6,925, cash in the hank in the amount of $2,100, an automobile and trailer, and certain household furnishings. Appellant also seeks a community half-interest in $6,000 expended to improve the separate property of A. J. Conley.

A. J. Conley and Ola Conley were married August 18, 1939, when Mr. Conley was 71 years of age and Ola Conley, the appellant, was 43 years of age. Prior to this date A. J. Conley had suffered a stroke and was not in the best of health.

At the time of his marriage to Ola Conley, A. J. Conley was the lessee of real property which the parties have referred to as the “school section.” This lease was renewed twice during the marriage and was relinquished in 1947 for $10,000 plus $100 interest.

At the time of his marriage to appellant, A. J. Conley also owned the “Acker” tract, a half-section of land in Curry County which he sold shortly after marriage for $4,800.

The Austin tract was acquired a short time after the marriage from two separate individuals, Austin and Robertson. A down payment of $1,382 was made to Austin. The land was put in a Federal Land Bank loan and enough was obtained on this mortgage, signed by both A. J. Conley and Ola Conley, to pay Robertson in full. Austin was paid in full from the proceeds of the sale of the school section.

The Yeakley tract was purchased in December of 1943 for $4,500 with $2,000 paid in cash and $2,500 raised through a Federal Land Bank mortgage which both A. J. Conley and Ola Conley signed.

In addition to the facts set forth above, the trial court made numerous findings of fact which we shall paraphrase. That after the ’marriage of A. J. Conley and Ola Conley, their subsistence was derived in small part from a few cattle, chickens, and hogs, with the remainder coming from rentals of A. J. Conley’s farms. That ill 1947 A. J. Conley sold the school section lease which he owned at the time of the marriage for $10,000, and used $6,000 of this amount to improve certain of his separate property. That Ola Conley always treated the property she owned at the time of marriage as her separate property, and maintained her own bank account. That during the marriage, the monies and bank accounts of each spouse were kept and maintained separate and .distinct from each other. That during the marriage, neither spouse performed actual physical labor in the planting, cultivation, or harvesting the crops, and that the income from the real property acquired after marriage was produced by hired labor or by tenants farming on a share basis. That the rental paid to the State on the school section was paid from the separate funds of A. J. Conley. That A. J. Conley rented the school section on a crop rental basis and the amounts received were the separate property of A, J. Conley. That the Yeakley tract and Austin tract were purchased with the separate funds of A. J. Conley. That during the marriage, Ola Conley and A. J. Conley traded and sold small numbers of hogs, cows, and chickens, and that the proceeds from these sales were very small and were divided between A. J. Conley and Ola Conley.

Based on these findings, the court concluded that no community property existed.

Since appellant relies heavily on the presumption that property acquired after marriage is community property, it must be kept in mind that this presumption is rebutted when, as in this case, the separate character of the property in question is proved by a preponderance of the evidence in the trial court. Campbell v. Campbell, 62 N.M. 330, 310 P.2d 266.

The school section lease is an item of property which is vital in the determination of this appeal. As appellant states, “The School Section was leased by decedent from the State of New Mexico under four successive five-year leases, the last two of which were executed during the marriage, and the last of which was relinquished for a consideration of $10,000, which both parties concede was the source of funds with which a large portion of the property involved herein was acquired, the question ■being whether the lease was community or separate estate.”

Appellant contends that the court erred in holding that the school section lease remained the separate property of A. J. Conley, and that there is no substantial evidence to support the court’s finding that the lease rentals were paid from the husband’s separate funds.

We believe the trial court was correct in holding that this lease remained the separate property of the deceased, A. J. Conley. Each renewal of the school section lease, two of which occurred after the marriage of A. J. Conley and Ola Conley, created a new estate. Accordingly the lease was presumptively community property and the burden was on the appellee to prove the separate character of the property by a preponderance of the evidence. Campbell v. Campbell, supra. We believe that appellee sustained this burden by proving that the lease rentals were paid from the separate funds of A. J. Conley.

Appellant urges that “there was no substantial evidence to support the court’s holding that the two tracts of land involved in these actions were acquired with separate funds.” We do not agree with this contention.

The Austin tract was acquired some four or five months after the marriage of A. J. Conley to appellant. It clearly appears that Mr. Conley was not gainfully employed in a trade, profession, or otherwise, not an unusual fact in view of his advanced age. There is simply no evidence to indicate that during this four-month period any community property was acquired. It necessarily follows that the down payment came from the separate funds of A. J. Conley. Appellant recognizes that this tract was paid off by 1948 with a part of the proceeds from the sale of the school section. We have already determined that the school section lease was the separate property of A. J. Conley. And property acquired after marriage in exchange for or with the proceeds from property owned before marriage remains separate property. Morris v. Waring, 22 N.M. 175, 159 P. 1002; Roberts v. Roberts, 35 N.M. 593, 4 P.2d 920. Thus the trial court correctly held that the Austin tract was the separate property of A. J. Conley.

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Bluebook (online)
1959 NMSC 065, 346 P.2d 1030, 66 N.M. 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conley-v-quinn-nm-1959.